Category Archives: Europe

Professional, But Not Professional Professional

When I went to Asia, I had been playing volleyball for a little over a year. After a month in Asia, Ryan and I played our first international tournament, which is detailed earlier in this blog. We had never touched the Mikasa ball, and in general, we sucked. We ended up winning one game and then going to another tournament the following week and I’m not sure if we scored more than ten points. One detail that I don’t think made that story is that we met some other Americans that had moved to Guam. One of them, Tatiana, told us that she had been playing for Guam and as new players, we were super impressed. She later informed us that she wouldn’t be a top player in the US, but the field is limited in Guam, so she’s top tier there. This started things swirling in my brain. I did some research and FIVBs at the time were using the star system. For American players, the prize pool of winning a one star wasn’t worth the travel if the tournament was held somewhere far from the US like Cambodia. I had the grand scheme of planning a trip to one of these locations and playing for the US and if we lost, then it’s just a vacation to that place. After that trip, COVID happened and after COVID, the FIVB switched to a new system that moved from five levels down to three, which basically pushed stars one through three into one division, crushing all hopes of us finding a tournament with no American teams.

I haven’t kept up with the blog or really posting, but I’ve taken a number of Ls this year. The citizenship stuff in Italy hasn’t gone well and it’s caused some other issues, but I’ll detail that in a post once it’s finally over. So after some bad citizenship news in April, I started digging into FIVB Futures details. There was a chance I wouldn’t be allowed to leave Italy and there were three events in Italy. I called up Ryan and asked if he was in to be dragged on more crazy adventures, and it’s usually an automatic greenlight for him. I began digging through player’s manuals and FIVB regulations and registered us to play in Lecce, Italy, a city we had lived in for a month. As I kept my eye on the registration list, no other American teams seemed to have joined, but neither had we. I had our confirmation so figured we just didn’t show up yet. What I learned is that US teams aren’t registered until the week before the deadline closes. A few days before the deadline closed, we found out that there were other American teams registered, and well known ones at that. There was no way we were taking that spot from them. Ever the optimist, I found an event in Switzerland, just outside of Italy, the same weekend that had another American team that I didn’t know and also wasn’t filled. Maybe that team didn’t have any points either, maybe it wouldn’t fill and we’d just get in. As the weeks went on, the tournament got more and more full. We were 25th on the reserve list. Even if we accounted for teams going over their country limit, we were still about 18th. We cancelled Ryan’s ticket to Europe and gave up on the dream. I had returned to the US and on the day I was to return to Italy, I randomly checked the teams list. Qualifications list, 16 seed, Massari/Rapini. We forgot that we didn’t need 18 teams to drop, we just needed the one American team to drop. Hopefully it was nothing bad, but we were in.

Test Your Might

I reached out to the USAV director and informed him that we got in and was told that we needed background screens, to complete classes and a health screening. Easy, easy and uhhh we will see. My Italian is decent, but is it “I’m playing a professional beach volley tournament, can you sign this to say I’m fit?” good? After returning to Italy, I called about making an appointment. Italy has two separate health certificates required for fitness things like going to the gym or competing in a tournament. For just going to the gym and general fitness, there is the medical agnostico and for competition, you need the medical sportivo agnostico. I’m still not sure what qualifies you to need either, as my yoga studio requires the first, but my gym requires nothing. I’ve played tournaments in Italy without one, but the big ones require it. Either way, I figured I would knock out the competition one and have it for the future, and then they would have to sign the FIVB health certificate because they’ve already said I’m fit enough to compete.

The only appointment I could get was less than a week before we were to be playing in Switzerland, so not much time if something went wrong. I showed up to the office and had a seat. Ten minutes, twenty minutes, things don’t move quickly in Italy. In Rome, government offices will give you appointment times like “8:30/9” which basically means, you show up at 8:30, but if I’m not ready until 9, you can’t complain. The doctor finally arrives and has some electrical device on his desk and then a step for step ups, so I think this should be easy enough. They take me to another room and start asking me questions. They mentioned a stress test and then take my shirt off and start suction cupping these electric wires around my chest. I’m stressed. Test worked. Then for five minutes, they are messing with the machine and saying it won’t work. At this point, I’m expecting to be shocked. We go back to the original room and get me set up on another variation of the device and nothing happens. They remove the suction cups and tell me to start doing high knees for three minutes. Mind you, I’m in regular street clothes, except they’ve had me remove my shirt and shoes and I’ve done no other physical activity today. I start doing high knees and they start asking me questions in Italian.  Like I said, my Italian is okay, but three minutes of high knees is removing all of the Italian in my brain. I am actively dripping all over this doctor’s office. They start having a conversation and I am pretty sure we go past three minutes. Then they have me lay down and suction cup me back up. It was an electro cardiogram, I’m an idiot. They ask me a few more question, I tell him I need the FIVB form signed, he gives me an odd look and asks if I’m playing for America or Italy. I tell him America, but hopefully Italy in the future. He says that’s the right answer and signs my form. Now we have all the requirements to play.

Right before Ryan arrives, I find out that Rome is rejecting my papers again and due to visa days, I will have to leave Italy again. So instead of having time to practice with Ryan, I am running around during the day getting documents in order and figuring out what I need to do. He arrives Sunday, I take care of business Monday and we grab some dinner Monday evening with our good friend (who has a bit more professional playing experience than us) Alex Ranghieri so that he could answer a million questions about our first FIVB event. Hilariously, all of the questions I was asking him were so commonplace for him that he seemed almost unsure of the answers. I was trying to make sure we did everything by the book and he just told us to go enjoy. So that was the plan.

We had moved up to Milan Tuesday to stay with Carla and be closer to Spiez, since staying in Italy is way cheaper than Switzerland and that’s where Carla lives. When we originally registered for the Italian tournament, we thought it was hilarious that we would be representing the US but with two Italian surnames in Italy, so I called our good friend Andrea Stuto to register as our coach. What could add to the hilarity more than having an Italian coach in the mix? Unfortunately, Stuto is cooler than us and had to bail last minute to go lead some physical training in the Maldives, so he didn’t come coach us, but we did get to see him for dinner in Milan. Dinner consumed, it was time to make sure we were packed and ready to go. The next day, we took a two hour train to Spiez. No backing out now.

Screensaver In Real Life

It’s a train station…they shouldn’t look this good

As I detailed in an earlier post, Switzerland is fake. It’s all a screensaver, I’m convinced. Every part is gorgeous, and the ride between Milan and Spiez was no exception. What is not gorgeous are the prices. Even with the player discount on hotels, the hotel was going to run us 240 euros per night, ouch. With the high chances of us losing, booking more than one night seemed like a big investment. Although, if you win two qualification matches, you move onto pool play and your hotel/food is comped. We were feeling brave and an extra day in Switzerland isn’t too bad, so we opted to book two nights. Right before booking, I found an Airbnb that had opened up right in the center of the city for 290 for both nights. Easy.

The view from the Airbnb balcony
A good amount of room with $290 for two nights, plus right along the river

We arrive in Switzerland, eat a pretzel and then go to register. I’m not really an anxious person when it comes to competition, but the entire day leading up to the tournament, my brain was on fire. A lot of the cool things I do aren’t fueled by bravery or some narcissistic view of myself, it’s more like an adrenaline whirlwind fueled by the fear of terror (and shame death associated with imaginary people talking shit about me). This was definitely one of those cases. I contemplated disappearing and leaving Ryan to register alone…but that didn’t happen. We booked a court to train the night before we played. First, we ventured to the main courts to register. Basically, we took a train and then had to go down a super steep hill to find the courts. I definitely have some photos here, because this is one of the most picturesque courts I’ve ever played on and they are permanently located there. Two courts at the bottom of a valley, right next to a lake with mountains as the backdrop. Insanity. A few teams are warming up as we walk by. As we walk up to the registration, I realize that I am the shortest player there by a large margin. We try on some jerseys and get a quick rundown for the next day. We received a name badge, some sports shower gel and instructions that we would receive our jersey on the court when we arrived for our game. Easy enough, we had some time before our practice court booking, so headed back to grab some snacks.

The view from these courts is insane

A train and bus ride took us to the other location of courts. Two courts in a gorgeous park in Thun. We had the reservation at 8:30pm, so it was already getting dark. There were girls practicing on the main court and a group of guys training on the warm up court. Ryan spoke to the court director while I went to get changed and one of the Lithuanian girls recognized Ryan from training in Mallorca and audibly laughed when he said we were playing the next day. After the court opened up, the group of guys sat around and watched us warm up. This year, the FIVB hastily switched to a new ball to meet the qualifications to use the ball in the next Olympics. Up until recently, it was impossible to get your hands on that ball, and I actually just got one the day before we left for Switzerland, so this was my second time using it and never in a game. I could hear the group of guys talking asking questions about us as we got started, so my anxieties became reality. Since Stuto couldn’t make it, we had no one to serve to us, so we did a pretty basic warm up practice set. Pepper, shot rundowns, shots, swings, serves. All the basic stuff made a bit more difficult by a ball that played differently. After a little more than an hour, it was already dark, so we said goodbye to the court director and took the bus back. We realized that Switzerland was not Italy and there were no food options at 10pm, so grabbed some kebabs and went home to sleep. The Airbnb had no air conditioning, so we cracked the window for some airflow and found that we were directly next to the river, so we got free river noises to sleep to.

We had our match assignment, first men’s game, 12:20pm against the Qualifiers 1 seed. The number two ranked team in Australia. I did some googling and unfortunately, there aren’t many videos of players at this level. From what I could tell, they were decent and looked pretty tall. We decided to show up a bit early to warm up and watch some games so we got everything ready in the morning, ate some food and headed to the courts. We didn’t receive our jerseys until the game and Europeans don’t usually play shirtless, so I had to decide what to wear for the warm up. We had just gotten the jerseys from Alex, so I went with that. Again, we didn’t have anyone to serve to us, so it was all basic warm up stuff, made extra weird because another team that didn’t play for 3 hours was doing a full practice session with their coach and we were using half of the court at the time. After a good warm up and serving at each other, we were about thirty minutes out from our match. The other team got on the court and started warming up. One was about six foot eight and the other was about six foot five. They definitely had us on height. No worries, we finished our warm up and went to take a break before the game. We were informed the game before us was a forfeit so we’d be on in twenty.

At this point, we’ve been given no real instruction on how anything would work. I’ve watched a lot of professional games, but I guess I never really paid attention to the tournament specifics. The woman with the jerseys awkwardly looked at me when I walked up and said she was looking for the USA team. I told her it was me and she pointed to the ITA on my jersey. I told her it was only for warm up. We had gotten blue, which matched our shorts pretty well. 

Another point that I need to make clear here is the amount of new things going on. Professional game, in another country, against people with professional experience. Refs, line judges, other officials, a crowd and an announcer. Honestly, there was so much going on that I couldn’t even hear the announcer. I have no memory of anything outside of the game itself. Ryan is famously aloof about pretty much anything. Where I am passionate and neurotic, he is unshakeable. This was definitely not the case in this situation. As my adrenaline spiked from the anxiety, I settled into a pretty calm rhythm. This is why I love arguing in games, once I hit that point, it’s nirvana. Ryan doesn’t function like that multiple days a week, so he was uncharacteristically rattled.

They told us that we had ten minutes on the court before the game started. We took some practice swings, but the other team was swinging as hard as they could and were sending the balls flying out of the court. No one went to get us more balls, so we basically stood there part of the ten minutes until I ran off to get balls. We got a few serves in until the same thing occurred. The next thing we knew, the other team was sitting down and the officials were just staring at us, apparently we were supposed to be sitting down. But not entirely, I guess I was the team captain so I had to go up to sign that we were starting the match. There was a coin flip and the other team chose receive, so I chose the side with the sun behind us as there was no wind at the time. They had us sit down and they announced the Australian team first, we at least got to see what they did. This part is pretty standard. As players are called, they usually remove hat and sunglasses, run to the service line and wave to the crowd. When they called my name, I popped off my glasses, jogged over and gave a wave. When they called Ryan, he just sort of ran over. Ever the rebel. We met the other team in the middle, shook hands and the game was to begin. I’ll link the video at the end, but the height difference was drastic.

Let The Games Begin

For the last few years since moving to Texas, I have been really working on my handsets. The more professional play I’ve watched, the more I’ve noticed that whichever team is giving better sets, is usually edging out teams. Being a good setter can help to nullify any weaknesses from passing or hitting. So I’ve put a lot of work in to have that skill, and it’s paid off in games. If you’ve ever played against Stephen and I when I’m in Cleveland and you left the net as soon as Stephen gave a less than ideal pass, you would have been immediately reminded about the value of a good set as Stephen bounced the ball in front of you. When Ryan and I practiced the night before our game, I could not give Ryan a set to save my life. I was doubling, launching the ball past him, setting lower than the net. I couldn’t get it right. So I definitely had some worries about how legal some of my sets were going to be with a professional ref watching, especially since the FIVB has gotten very strict in the last year. I only expound on this because point one Ryan put the team a little of system with his serve. This was followed by a pretty heinous set even by recreation league standards. You can tell in the video that Ryan and I both kind of stop, which you shouldn’t do at any level, and the ball is promptly hit with no whistle called. Everyone made predictions of me arguing with the ref, myself included, because I have a long and storied past of arguing with refs and players, but no argument here. I was a bit out of my element. . You can see Ryan and I discussing that our hands won’t get called as we walk back to serve receive. Next point. The player who doubled immediately serves into the net….ball doesn’t lie.

Throwing up a set for Ryan

I usually have a pretty calm serve routine and it’s usually very effective, but something about knowing there was an eight second limit after the whistle had me rushing for my serve the entire time. This led to a lot of easy serves, especially the first one. I also cheated on defense and the ball was promptly hit where I should have been. Next point essentially sees the other team getting a free ball and I make a quick dodge of the hit and it land right inside the backline.

Next up, Ryan gets dug but there’s a block touch so it has to come over. I get a trap set on the left side, but some time playing with Ahsan down in Texas has prepared me for this, so I recycle it to Ryan and it is promptly punched out of bounds, but the other guy got a net touch, point good guys. A service error sees them get the ball back. A nice rip down Ryan’s line gets him in an odd spot and the pass shoots past my face, but I’m able to take a look at the court and poke the ball into the net, dribbling right in between the players. I can tell Ryan is being a bit sporadic, so I tell him to take some breaths.

Two more service errors sees us with the ball again. Ryan serves, they toss up an option and the ball is hit just outside of my left hand as I go for the block and hits the back seam. A service error and a hitting error has us tied with the Australians. Next point, Ryan gets a block touch that is picked up…and then promptly does my least favorite Cleveland thing, leaves the net before the ball is set. The ball is immediately smashed down his line. Next point, Ryan gets blocked and it comes directly back to him, but again, there’s a lot going on and anxiety is high, so he punches it over as a free ball…again smashed down the line. Ryan takes a breath on the next point and hits a nasty cut shot that the defender can’t get.

Another important difference to professional play is that they have people in charge of getting the balls and given to you before the serve. As neither of us has ever had this and it was not explained to us, we kind of just played it how we’re used to. If there was no ball near us, we would get it from them, but if the ball was near us, we picked it up and went back to serve. On two occasions, Ryan was yelled at to switch out the ball, this was one of them. Doesn’t matter, the team realized how much taller than were than us and hit an easy line shot. Next point is an overpass, I make an attempt to get to the net in time to contest, but no luck. Easy point for mister six eight. Next serve is similar, but Ryan takes a bit off and I’m able to get a bump set off. Textbook tool off the block and it’s my turn to serve. I hit a deep corner serve and immediately hear a whistle…the ref never whistled to give me the go ahead to serve. Whoops. I get the ball back and hide it behind my back until she whistles again. This time, I lollipop a serve to the right side. He bangs it cross, I get a hand on it but no dig. “First serve was better.” I chuckle to Ryan as we walk back to receive.

A little float just over the net down the seam is the first serve I receive…it’s also the first in game serve I’ve ever received with the new Mikasa ball. I catch it low and put it a bit too far to Ryan’s left. I take my left step to line up to the set and…Ryan standing hits it several feet out of the back of the court? Like I said, he was rattled. Brand new territory for him. Next serve slams into the tape and pops up, but thankfully stays on their side.

For FIVB play since COVID, teams get a specific side that they must make switches around. Ours was to the side furthest from our seats and it was super confusing. There is a lot going on, so when you notice it’s a side switch, you have to go a specific way, regardless of where you are. There are also technical time outs once you reach a total of twenty one points, and at that point, you go back to your seat. If your side to switch is away from your seats and you go to just switch normal, you’re now very far from your seat and have to run back, which we did both games.

After the technical timeout, I walk back to serve. Fun fact: in beach volleyball, there is no penalty for serving out of order since technically the rules specify that the refs are responsible for keeping track of service order. There are actual refs here, so they tell me it’s Ryan’s turn. Aussies go with a back set and it is bounced into the hard angle where both players have been hitting most of the time. No worries, first game is for feeling out the team. Next serve comes to me. Middle pass, I step in for the set, but it goes wide and high and we’re on the side looking into the sun. No call so I try for a cut and it’s picked up. I go for the line block but it’s again bounced into the hard angle. Insert Sam bitching about no call after the set here. Next one comes down my seam again, but might deeper. I adjust my hips but I’m still not used to this ball so it goes a bit too far right. Ryan cleans it up with a back bump set and having just heard the no call bitching gives a line call. Nice little toss to the back corner is launched out of the court as the defender uses his inside arm to try to flipper. 

I never close my mouth when I play volleyball

My float serve is tossed up in the middle, Ryan doesn’t even make an attempt to block and the ball is hit directly at me. I get my platform that, but forearms are rotated too far internally. With a wilson, that goes right to the center, but with the Mikasa, it enters the stands. I loudly yell the F word. This is important to call out because I usually don’t swear on the court and you can get in trouble for it at this level, but I have yelled a swear word almost every other point at this point in the game and Ryan and I have been waiting for the ref to say something. Still nothing here even though it was pretty vocal. Next up, Ryan launches a seam ball just a few inches too deep, but the blocker isn’t being intentional with his hands and gets a touch on it.

Both of these guys have enough height and vertical on us that they could have just rolled everything over us with just a little pace, but instead they were going for bounces. The set goes out wide and I run with the hitter. He swings outside of my hands and bounces it just outside of the line. Ryan hits a nice inside out serve to the blocker’s line and he tosses the ball up to the middle, almost exactly the same as last time the right side slammed an option passed me into the seam. This time I acknowledge he’s only opened for the seam and reach my left hand in. Terminal block to the back of the court. Toss it on the stat sheet. I am a professional blocker. Unfortunately, next ball they learned their lesson. A weird little cutty just over my hands lands in front of Ryan. He’s still confused that these guys aren’t putting any pace on the ball and didn’t realize he would’ve gotten there fast enough.

After I pass another seam float like garbage, the next point is full of madness, but let me preface this part first. There are two camps as far as the morality of volleyball go on certain things. Most people will say “There is a ref, if they don’t see something, I’m not calling it. It’s their job.” Some people believe in calling their own stuff. I probably land somewhere in the middle. I’m not going out of my way but I won’t lie. Back to the game. I pass the ball middle, Ryan throws a super high double into a trap set by the pin. I poke it into the block and out of bounds but catch the net with my elbow on the way down. I call my net touch and start to walk away. The ref says it is my point, but I tell her I got net and the Aussie blocker also tells her I got net. The ref is super confused. I walk back to serve receive. After getting the video, I noticed the double, but I also noticed that when the blocker went up and got tooled, he put both of his arms into the net. So while I was running blind to a trap set, I assumed I got net due to the weird situation, when in reality, I got net because it was bouncing into me from him getting it with both arms. The audacity of this man to repeat that I got net when there’s no way he didn’t realize he got it with both arms. 

Quick little recycle
Quick little recycle

Another middle pass, another high set, but this time no trap. I slam it outside of the defender’s center line and he passes it out of the court. The rundown set goes a bit off of the net so I peel. This guy has done nothing but try to bounce the line so I’m cheated and low and he waffles a deep one at my chest. I get hands on it, but leave them together like an idiot. Time for more peel drills post game. The pass goes up to the net but with a bit too much forward momentum for Ryan to reach. Ryan tries to swing the next one down the seam and goes directly into the block. I’m immediately sad that this guy now has as many blocks as me. Immediately following being blocked, Ryan calls for a timeout. The score is 13-20. I ask him why he wants the timeout. He says this is their longest run and walks back to our seats. After sitting down, he realizes what the score is.

For the duration of these two games, Ryan was so psyched out about getting a double called that he was launching all of my sets about two times as high as they needed to be. This is usually pretty disadvantageous for a smaller player because it lets the blocker set up where the set will be, solidifying their height advantage, and it removes most of the hitter’s vision because they’re having to look straight up at the ball and losing peripheral vision of the court as the go up to attack, not to mention that the ball gains speed as it drops from a higher point, so it forces timing to be more exact. The extra variable in this match was the stadium. The bleachers and such tend to block out most of the wind on the actual court, but once you get above the height of the bleachers, there’s some wind movement, so the ball is affected at the vertex. Adjusting for wind is part of the game, adjusting for wind on some small percentage of the game is a bit more mental work. Nerd rant over, the next set goes really high and Ryan gives a line call. I shoot the line but the defender is already there. Ryan gets a hand on it, but is unstable so the ball is launched out of the back of the court. Game one, 13-21.

Again, But Better This Time

We take a seat and get some water. One of the officials comes and stands directly in front of us with her arms crossed and says nothing. I am immediately convinced I am about to be scolded for the amount of swearing I am doing on the court. I look at Ryan. His eyes are telling me that we’re on the same page. I stare back at her and she says “Your choice.”. They chose serve receive for first game so it was our pick. Again, there’s no real side advantage and Ryan requests that we serve first. Statistically, at this level, a team should have 65-75% chance of scoring the point when serve receiving (unless the opposing server is Evandro or Jake Gibb). For these reasons, I refuse to tell them we pick serve, so I pick the same side as last time and they obviously pick receive, so we still get serve.

Ryan serves the blocker and he goes for another line bounce….again a few inches out. He serves the defender…who goes for a line bounce, which goes a few inches out. Serve three of game one, Ryan slams his serve down the middle, but goes to high so it is definitely going out…but it has a slight curve to it and the defender is already too locked out on his receive to move, so it bounces off his shoulder and leaves the court. Ryan’s fourth serve trickles the net and heads to the line but the blocker gets it up. The set goes outside so he is forced wide. I line up the block, but he decides to take some off it, so my timing is off by about a second. The ball goes perfectly between my thumbs and skims off the top of my head onto the back line. I tell him he gave me a haircut and he doesn’t even crack a smile. Another serve into the net and it’s my turn. The blocker passes into the net and set goes tight. Ryan goes for the joust with his outside hand and the blocker is entirely over him. I get a hand on the resulting touch but not soft enough to get it back to Ryan. The ref makes no call on the open hand, so we head back to receive. Ryan passe middle, gets a set in the middle and I call him line. We’re at 4-2 game 2 and Ryan has gone line exactly 0 times this match….and this point was no difference. He hits cross inside the block and out the back of the court. 4-3 switch. 

A shanked pass puts us to 4-4. Next pass goes to the perfect spot, but we’re on the side with the sun, which is now directly overhead. I acknowledge that I can’t see the ball at all, but my hands are already up, so I’m a bit trapped. Ball goes directly through my hands and we’re at 4-5 from up 4-1. I’d be embarrassed about this point, but Jake Gibb did it at the Olympics in Tokyo, so I feel honored. Ryan passes the next one to his line. When we first started playing together, this was his favorite place to pass, so I’ve got a lot of reps setting from here. I dive under the next and get my platform on it. I get him a decent middle set and he…standing pokes it 20 feet into the air? At this point, I’m directly under the net, so when I roll over to give him the call, I see the blocker hit the net with his arms on the way up. Having read the FIVB manual, I immediately run back to defend throwing up the C with my hand for the challenge. I run into the cross and am a half step too late for the dig. It hits my thumbs and is dead. I immediately engage the ref requesting the challenge on the net touch and just as quickly, she tells me no. Not “There was no net touch”, just “No.”. She waves me back to receive. I’m entitled to 2 challenges, but again there’s a lot going on, so I didn’t push it.

Next point, Ryan over passes, I run to get it if it’s on our side and Ryan stays where he passed it, so the option is bounced to the open court. We walk back to serve receive and the ref doesn’t whistle for the other team to serve. We’re all staring at her and nothing. Then the officials all start speaking to each other, we’re still told nothing. The top ref is waved down to the table and runs over. We’re still told nothing. I’m convinced that the officials are now checking the video and saw the net touch I called the challenge on, but since the top ref completely ignored me and had us play another point, she can’t overturn the previous point anymore. They go back and forth, still saying nothing to us. Two minutes later, the top ref returns to her stand and whistles for them to serve. At no point did anyone tell us what was happening or what was going on, but we’re pretty sure it had to do with my ignored challenge.

Next one is a great pass from Ryan, the blocker is still not being intentional with his hands so Ryan easily goes off the fingers and it goes the opposite direction of the defender. Another bounce down our seam and the next serve comes to me. This time Ryan gives me the lower middle set I actually like, but I’m lined up for the high outside sets he’s been giving me. I dart inside and since it’s a lower set, I have complete vision of the court. I jump up with the blocker and cut the ball to the right side. My turn to serve, but I head back and we all realize it’s a switch. I’ve tossed balls back to the ball people all game, but at this point, it was my turn to serve, so I just walk to the other side with it. No one yells at me, but as we cross sides, the top ref notices and audibly laughs (check for it in the video at 24:18).

I finally get some pace on a serve and it goes up in the middle, this time for the blocker. Remember last time that he slammed it right at me and I was too tense and didn’t get the easy dig. This time, he runs up with a slide and smashes it right outside of my center line. I dive right and get it up to the center with a one hander (an old favorite of mine). Ryan turns of the block and bump sets the ball….to the left side of the court and twice as high as the dig. Insert tears emoji here. I’m just getting up from the dig and now not only don’t have vision but I’m running to a set away from my hitting arm. Ryan gives me a call, but it’s “Come on, come on”, which doesn’t exactly mean anything to me as a hitter. I got for the deep line and miss it by about a foot, which probably didn’t matter because it would have been directly to the blocker. I chuckle at Ryan as we walk back to receive.

Next pass goes just in front of Ryan and I don’t see him take the right step as I go for the set, because he’s a left side who always kicks out to the left. He doesn’t give a behind call until the ball is about to touch my platform, so he ends up getting the same set I just got as I try to change the outside set to a back set. Same as me, he’s coming from the right to a high set with no vision. He recycles the ball of the block and yells “Come on” for me to get the block cover. I get low and get the block cover, shout out Beachbox Camps. I look over to see if Ryan will get the set off and he’s facing out of court. Pika shocked. Back to serve receive. I give Ryan a tighter pass but he gets low and handsets a height I like. I got for my own hard angle bounce and realize I haven’t opened my shoulder to swing once yet. I catch some tape but the ball lands in the first three meters. Hardest angle point of the game, count it.

Good contact is key
Good contact is key

Blocker goes for a hard angle swing again, but I time the block better this time and get it. Unfortunately, he was swinging deep, so it goes right back to him. I switch the call to line and Ryan forgets that all they do is swing hard angle. Ball lands about four feet to his left. Next serve goes to Ryan and I give him a middle set. I give the line over call and he swings directly into the block I just told him about. I gently weep inside as I remember Ryan’s line shot count is still at 0, 7-12 game 2. Ryan throws his next pass up as an option, but doesn’t say a word. I run up late and poke a high cut. I’m trapped up at the net trying not to go into it and Ryan doesn’t move from where he passed it, another easy point for mister six eight.

Next ball comes to me, Ryan gives me another set I like and the blocker doesn’t reach outside of me or leave my viewline. A few feet of open court to my right and I drop it there again. Cue another technical timeout that we go the wrong way for and have to run back to our seats. After the time out, I go for a quick seam ball, catch tape and get the trickle ace. It’s bullshit, but I’m not sorry. I go back to serve again and for some reason go even lighter than my trickle serve. Rookie mistake. Next serve goes to Ryan, lower fast pass up to the net. I get there in time and toss the set up. As I go to make a call, I realize Ryan is in front of me, so he is definitely in front of the ball. He awkwardly steps back and outside, another shot from the ground, several feet out. I can actively hear Ryan breathing from serve receive now. The anxiety from the game paired with the fatigue from the amount he has been served is visually adding up. With this team going for nonstop showballs, our major key to success is to let them make errors and not make our own. Another reminder to take a breath.

Another seam serve my way. I take a step out instead of in and the high set drifts inside middle. Ryan gives the deep like call, but with the set drifting, anything line is going into the block or so high that I could go pick it up after I shoot it. I go for a little cut but the defender gets it on the dive. He hits a lofty line shot but I’m too dug into to take the two steps to get it. 59 points into this match and this guy hits his first shot. Next serve is down the seam to me again, but Ryan reaches in and passes the ball up to my side of the net. I’ve already taken the step into the seam so I’m nowhere near getting it. Ryan tells me to call him off…I retort that it’s my middle on that serve and his line. As if the server heard me, he hits a perfect float serve right down Ryan’s line next. Ryan gets there with an outstretched arm but not enough to get the ball up. A service error ends their ace streak and sees us switch sides.

Ryan has an odd toss and a mishit to repay them the favor on the missed serve. Deep float to Ryan goes tight on the pass. Following a set, I yell line. At this point, I’m not even looking. Ryan hasn’t gone line single time, the defender is camped in the cross before the set is even off. He goes for the same cut shot he went for before, but now he’s fatigued so it goes out by about a foot. I’m telling Ryan how he has half a court to his left before I’m even turned around. We both walk back to serve receive and as I look across the court, the Aussies are also standing to serve receive. Nothing is said to me, so I assume a net touch by the blocker, who has already had a few at this point, and head back to serve. 

Ryan goes for a cut shot

I hit a deep float to the guy who has hit exactly one shot. I see the set go out wide and his chest open up the same way it did game one when I got a hand on it and slide a bit more to my right. He slams the ball about a foot in front of me and to my right,  I drop to get my platform under but don’t get my hips under it enough. The dig is up and to the center. Luckily, it’s high so the blocker has an easy swing, but has no vision, which gives some advantage to the blocker. This is one of the reasons why you’ll see most pro blockers do a block redirect here versus swinging blindly into a block on these types of points. I stumble up and yell for Ryan to go, because from my vantage point, this is a ball he needs to attack. I look over to see if he’s going to attack or set me and realize it’s just over. I also notice in that moment that Ryan has done that stupid Cleveland thing I mentioned earlier where he just left the net instead of going for the block. So instead of contesting the ball, Ryan is in no man’s land and I’m stumbling up from my dig to defend the whole court. The blocker swings seam, catches tape and I’m only able to get a hand on it. Point not converted.

Next serve comes to me, decent set height but is drifting into the block. As I approach, the blocker is again in my midline and not actually in my line. He reaches to get to the ball before I’m at the top and I push the cut into his outstretched hand. The defender knows I have nowhere else to go, but the push off the hands drops the ball within a meter shorter than he was anticipating so he barely gets a hand on it. Shout out Ahsan again for all the trap set training. Ryan puts the blocker in some service trouble on the next point, but he gets an outside set and I’m trapped in the middle from watching the option. He swings line and tags it. Game over.

We shake hands with the team and then with the refs and line judges. I run off to thank the ball people and Ryan follows as the other team heads back to their seats. The officials head towards the table. After we say our thanks, I realize there was one more and start looking around…as I’m looking around, I realize everyone is back to their seats and we are standing on the opposite side like lost puppies. All of the officials are staring at us. I run back to the seats and since I have to sign the official papers again and Ryan is still over on the side looking lost. Everything handled, we go back to our seats to get our stuff. An Oakley case is sitting on my seat and I wonder why I would have left the case on the seat. As I pick it up, one of the Egyptian players up next says it is his. I chuckle as I explain the confusion and grab my things to go sit in the shade. 

The Aftermath

We had some friends speciating so we went to the stands and chatted with them before heading to the lake. We jump in and I immediately realize I’m still not cooled down from the sun. The water is in the sixty to seventy degree range and requires swimming the whole time. We chat about the game and after a few minutes, I realize my odds of cramping are rapidly increasing and take to the stairs. We stick around for a few hours to finish watching the qualifiers and hang out with friends. It starts pouring so we hide in a nearby tent to continue watching. As I realize we’re sitting in the tech tent, I ask the tech guy if the games will be available after that date as they were live on Youtube and you couldn’t go back to previous games. He tells me that due to copyright stuff, the game plays live and is gone forever so they don’t worry about copyright issues with music. I ask if there’s some sort of local copy that we could steal since we played at 5am US time and he says no. After a few minutes, he says “Actually, we had a weird issue today where it recorded the first half of the day. If you have a flash drive or something, you could take it, but you have to find your own game.”. Luckily, Ryan has all the tech gadgets so we did and he said we could come the next day to get our game. 

We stuck around to see how some of the teams we had met ended up and the Australians that beat us ended up playing the only other team that was about our size and didn’t end up making the main draw. The beauty of beach volleyball. After the long day, we head back to the train to go home. As we’re getting on the train, two girls with volleyballs are behind us and just say “Hey, volleyball” as they step on behind us. We find out they are the Canadian team in the main draw and tell them that as the only other North American team, we’re now rooting for them. A few of the top main draw players were on the train as well as they had to go register.

A quick stop for Indian food has us remember why we don’t venture to Switzerland much. Twenty to thirty euros per plate for mediocre Indian food. Ouch. Oh well, we pay and venture around the town a bit. We stop to watch some surfers riding dam waves and then roam around a bit more before opting to go home.

The dam waves

The next day we get up and pack our things. The Airbnb host says we can just keep our key since we will be leave two hours after checkout. We decide to head to the tournament early to get the video and show up in the middle of the first game. There are quite a few Swiss teams in the main draw, so the fans are filled with locals…and many screaming children. We got the video from the tech guy and ventured around the lake for a bit. Ryan stopped to fly his drone around and get some nice videos of the area (which I think are on his Instagram if you’re into that stuff). We had randomly picked some teams to support the previous day, so we stuck around to watch them before running off to the other location to watch the Canadian girls. We were told there was a bus between the two locations, but when I asked about it, I was met with a blank stare.

Since the main courts were in a valley, it was a bit of a brutal walk up to the bus station. We followed Google’s instructions and waited at an unmarked bus station. After a few minutes, we began to wonder if this bus was going to drive right past us. A local from a balcony yelled that the train station was at the top of the hill. We told him we needed a bus and he pointed across the roundabout to a stop. Then he yelled that there was one coming and we sprinted off to catch it and it was the one we needed. Thanks, random balcony man.

A gorgeous bus ride and we get to the courts we had warmed up on. Before we left, I reminded Ryan to grab his player badge because it was required for free admission. He doesn’t love listening so definitely didn’t do that. I flashed my badge, which at the other venue was enough for them to let us both in, but for this one, she immediately looked at Ryan and said “You’re a player, too?”. I withheld my urge to tell her that he is too short to be a player and explained that we play together and she let us both in. 

We made our way to the courts and the Canadian team was down in the first game. This venue was much quieter. No one in the stands and other things going on. In fact, the courts existed in a large park that was entirely filled with people sunbathing and swimming. We stuck around and cheered a bit, but they lost the first and couldn’t eek out the win in the second. The court director we met while training mentioned to us that there was also an international high diving competition at the venue so we walked over to watch some of that. My grandfather and uncle used to high dive, but I’ve never seen it in person. It was madness. Standing at the very top of this structure, the divers would just stare off like in a meditative state, and hop off, flipping through the air into the pool below. Humans do some cool stuff.

The view from the park at the second courts

A quick bus ride back to the hotel and we stop for some snacks. The Airbnb host informs me that the guests taking our room are early and ask us to give the keys directly to them. Weird, but no problem. We walk in and there are three girls sitting in the common area. As we walk towards are room, they ask “Do you have our key?” and I tell them we do, but need to grab our things first. When we were told we had the room until we left, I didn’t think about the fact that they’d want to clean it still, so we just left our things mostly packed on the table. The Airbnb owner put all of our things in the closet, so now there was an extra layer of checking that we grabbed everything. The girls then proceeded to just stand in the doorway as Ryan and I packed up our things. Mine were mostly packed, so I just grabbed it and handled it in the living room. I hate people being over my shoulder. After a few minutes, Ryan walked in and asked why I did that to him. Whoops. The girls then proceeded to hang out in the common area, so there was no reason for them to hover over us. Oh well. We catch the train and make our way back to Milan.

Two more days hanging out with Carla in Milan and then I was off to Morocco. Rome had rejected my papers again, so I was playing the visa day game again. Ryan headed off back to Switzerland to catch his cheap flight to the US from Zurich and that was the quick trip to become professional USA volleyball players.

The boys are pros now

I’ll be trying to be a bit more consistent with these blog posts for the time being so next up is Morocco, getting laid off and a trip to Serbia. Until next time, friends!

If you’re interested in watching the game, you can find it here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H6eCjWKOiYM

On The Road Again

A farewell to cool dogs, Lady Bird Lake and my favorite downtown to see the sunset hit

It’s been quite a bit since I’ve written one of these…and if you go back to the first one, the writing was not so good…so I’d expect the same here as I get back into this. It’s not that I haven’t been adventuring, but I have been finding it difficult to sit down and write. This month, there have been a few milestones…and humans have the easiest time starting things when there is a milestone so it seemed like the perfect time to start writing here again.

This month, I turned 30 and moved out of Austin…to live in Italy. Over the last two years of bloglessness, I have been practicing Italian. After meeting a few Italians via volleyball and other friends, I started coming to Italy every other month to practice the language and see the country. The more time I spent here, the more I felt aligned with my heritage. Learning Italian in Texas is a bit difficult and I was becoming a bit exhausted with America and missing adventure. I did some work to get all of my documentation lined up and am going to get my Italian citizenship by descent while I live here. Outside of that little update, this blog post is going to cover the trip out to Italy.

The trailer made it from Austin all the way to my sister’s house in Olmsted Falls

At the beginning of August, Ryan came down to Texas and I did a little farewell tour to Austin. I spent some time with all the various friends I met, ate at all of my favorite restaurants and sold a lot of my things. Needless to say, I spent too much time doing fun stuff and packing didn’t take priority. Ryan and my dear friend Becca did all of the packing while I lolligagged around last minute. One day, I’ll stop procrastinating…but as long as it keeps working out, probably not. We attached a trailer to my Encore and set off on the twenty four hour drive back to Cleveland. Pretty boring drive, but it preempted the three weeks I got to spend in Cleveland with my family and enjoying the city for the first time in summer in four years. The three weeks were mostly filled with family time, volleyball, a dadchelor trip to West Virginia, and a wedding celebration.

Shout out Guardians for a win when I took my Dad for our birthdays

When I decided to move to Italy, I had no idea where I wanted to live(spoilers: I still don’t), so I came to Italy a bunch to check it out. To finish my citizenship, I have to have a lease and have to stay in the same city for four to six months while they finish all of the processing. I decided that I should spend a month somewhere while I get comfortable being in a foreign country before signing a lease, so Ryan agreed to spend the month in a small town we visited earlier this year called Cesena. We came here in February to visit our friend Andrea that we met via Beachbox Camps and he agreed to train us if we lived here for a month. Last time I was in Europe, I realized I had been to twenty seven countries. This gave me the idea to hit three more countries before we got to Cesena so that I’d hit my thirtieth country just after my thirtieth birthday. The battle plan was to leave Cleveland on August 29th.

Like any of my travel stories, they don’t go as planned. I spent the day of the 29th saying goodbye to my family and finishing up packing (see earlier for other procrastination references). An hour before I was supposed to meet Ryan at the airport, the flight got delayed by two hours. No big deal, just some more time to spend with family. After clicking into the app to check on the exact time of the delay, I saw another message stating that the delay pushed us into a storm, so the flight was canceled. After interacting with support for the booking site and the airline, nothing had changed. They booked us for a flight the next evening, which would have us in London later than we were even planning to stay there. Ryan headed to the airport and got an agent to get us another flight in the morning to Oslo, Norway so we wouldn’t miss our plans there. Once that was settled, we spent the evening playing Mario Party and eating pizza with my family, so overall, not too bad.

Prior to leaving, my dear sweet nephew, Max, couldn’t help but be a little plague bearer (because that’s what children do) and so I left Cleveland pretty congested. We got to the airport the next morning, no problems and headed off to an eight hour layover in New York. My work wife, Chelsea, also happened to be in New York for the weekend and was heading to Europe that afternoon. The plan was to hop into the city, hang out and then take an Uber back to the airport with Chelsea since she was heading to the same airport. What I didn’t plan for was the pressure change of a plane descending to smash my eustachian tubes with the congestion, making me feel like I permanently had an earbud in my ear. So basically, my few hours in New York were spent feeling like I had my head underwater and I couldn’t hear anything. Regardless, we met up with Chelsea and her friend, Rachel for drinks with a view of the Brooklyn Bridge and wandered around the city for a few hours.

I guess I see why people visit New York

The taxi and flight were pretty uneventful. At some point in the air, the pressure had changed enough that I was able to clear my ears and finally feel normal again. It was all a ruse though. As we descended, my ears became congested again, but this time both of them. This time accompanied by a brutal pressure in my head. Not a fan, but not too bad.

Bring Me Your Best

Of all of my travels, I have only checked two bags. One when I moved to Austin…and one for this trip. I thought I could just ship a package to Italy after I arrived…but right before I left, I found out that would cost me upwards of fifteen hundred dollars. So this trip, I had my regular travel bag (around thirty pounds), my Yeti laptop bag (another twenty) and a large checked bag (almost exactly fifty pounds). This is important because it dictated some of our movement for the week. 

Back to the actual trip, we landed in Oslo, got all of our bags to a nice hotel that our friend Jenny booked for us. With little to no sleep and both of my ears congested to the point where I couldn’t hear, Ryan and I head off to a tournament. We ubered to the event and walked up. We got lucky and it was around 75 degrees, which is rare for an evening in Oslo at the end of August. We made it a priority to make it to this tournament because the Olympic gold medalists are from Norway and they would be playing. This was also a threes tournament where you randomly got different teammates of various skill levels every game.

Exhausted and with the inability to hear, being social wasn’t really on the menu. Everyone there spoke English well but were obviously defaulting to Norwegian. I got the chance to play against both olympians, but it’s always difficult with random teammates to play a solid game. Ryan didn’t get so lucky. Seven or eight games later and the tournament came to an end. We stuck around to play a game with our friend Jenny and Adrian that we met in Zanzibar earlier this year. After the event, we roamed our way back to the hotel. It was around 10pm…everything was mostly closed. We tried ordering things but didn’t have texting in Norway…so ended up getting pizzas and kebabs. Our eyes were bigger than our stomachs, so we definitely got a bit too much.

The next day, we stored our bags and headed to the Oslo city center. My favorite thing to do is go to a single point of interest and then just walk as we find other things. So we headed to an area of Oslo called Barcode and roamed around. The architecture of Oslo is gorgeous, it’s like a mix of modern and older European. It’s a bit odd because they will make buildings that look like older European cities but are obviously new. The city is surrounded by water and nature, which is always a beautiful backdrop. There are also places to sit everywhere, which seems so odd. Around 3pm on a Thursday, the area was full of people just sitting around. Norway has a really interesting situation because it was one of the poorest countries in Europe before they found all of the oil. After getting all of that oil money, they made a lot of decisions with the good of the people in mind, which seems a bit wild coming from America. Every citizen has a large pension set for them and they did a lot to improve the quality of life there, knowing that eventually the oil will run out. It seems crazy that like 5 Norwegians didn’t take all that money but I guess we don’t all capitalism so well.  Anyways, after that, our friend, Adrian, met up with us and we walked around the city a bit more. He left because he had to get ready for a Rome trip and we realized we had walked about 15 miles so we headed back to the hotel and ate some food.

Norwegians sitting around with some nature

The next day, we had a flight around 6pm, so we went to find some Norwegian waffles with yogurt and strawberry on one half (amazing) and caramelized cheese on the other (not so much). After we tried this, the weather turned gloomy. Our hotel was actually attached to an IMAX and despite my deep love of movies, I had never been to one. Ryan doesn’t really love movies, but it’s raining, so too bad. We looked up some movie times and NOPE was playing in IMAX and ended right at the time we needed to leave. So we packed our stuff, brought it to the main desk and headed over. Norway apparently treats their concession stands like a convenient store filled with snacks, which is pretty cool, and after posting that, I found out apparently a lot of Europe does too. We saw this movie, it was great, and then hopped in a taxi on our way to the airport.

A Land of Castles and Friends

Next stop: Estonia. This one has been on the list for a while. We’ve met a lot of Estonians via Beachbox Camps, since they’re neighboring countries. I had heard it was all castles, so what’s not to love. The part we were a bit quieter about (shout out Americans lack of geographical knowledge) is that Estonia borders Russia and Russia wasn’t so happy with them when we arrived. I wasn’t particularly worried, but no reason to make loved ones worried. Anyways, we flew in, walked around some castles and found the closest open restaurant….an American themed pub. Whatever, food is food. The next day our friend, Merike, picked us up with her boyfriend and we met her beach volley partner and some others from Beachbox Camps at the indoor facility they play at. Upon walking in, I noticed it looked strikingly similar to the one in Riga, Latvia, which I found out is because it is owned by Renars, who runs Beachbox Camps. Small world. We played an hour or two of sideout and then Martin gave us a tour of Tallinn.

This looks quite familiar

During the tour, we stopped for some lunch and walked by the seaside. They had some historic battleships that we were just allowed to climb all over. I always enjoy these things because Americans would die or break things if you let them do this. As proof, I immediately climbed into a gunner seat to mess around. Other than this, jet lag was starting to hit me and Estonia doesn’t share the same love of seats as Norway, but luckily we found some public bean bag chairs overlooking the sea to get some fresh air. After this, we saw some other volleyball places and then went to relax in the hotel. A few hours later, we ordered a straight up American portion of food and met our friends for a board game night. Other than Mafia, I haven’t played board games in any other language and we immediately realized that if we played in English, we likely hold an advantage, but if we played in Estonian, we just can’t play. After some solid hospitality and friend time, it was time to head home to sleep before an early flight.

We flew into Venice and grabbed a train to Rimini, the Myrtle Beach of Europe. One chill night here walking along the beach before heading to Cesena for our month long stay. After this, I spent the month in Cesena, hit Belgium to see Amine and my thirtieth country. At the end of the month, I headed back to Austin for 5 days and immediately flew back to Spain for Beachbox Mallorca. These things will just be covered in an IG post in favor of writing more vaguely about Italy and living here. Thanks for reading while I knock the rust off. Ciao ciao!

The plaza in front of our Cesena apartment

Off the Rails: May 20th – June 5th

Most of me traveling is just walking around in beautiful places

So it’s been a bit since I posted, so this will cover just over two weeks. Back to solo traveling has slowly pushed me into old habits, namely very rapidly jumping from city to city. I can rip through a city alone and after sitting on buses/trains/planes the last thing I want to do is sit in a random city. So I’ve been a bit busy running around to write a blog post, but I am uncomfortably blasting this one out on a train ride. Without further explanation, our story left off arriving in Vienna.

Like a Storm Cloud Over My Head

So I have been dragging rain clouds with me to each city. Apparently before I arrive and after I leave is beautiful weather, but storms arrive with me. I exit my bus in Vienna in a rain jacket and with my rain fly on my bag. A short walk and I arrive at my hostel, my first time back in a hostel in Europe. I couldn’t check in yet, so I dropped my bag and roamed around for a bit before coming back to check in. Vienna is home to some of famous musicians of the past and is known for its music. I walked around to see all of the amazingly detailed statues throughout the city and feel sad that all of the food options were similar to Berlin but much more expensive. After roaming, I wasn’t feeling very social so I found a local artsy movie theater and saw Stan and Ollie.

Hercules statues let you know what houses not to mess with

The next morning, two people from my room were doing the walking tour so I joined them. Vienna’s history is filled with cool stories and has all the awesome statues to match. I was especially a big fan of all of the Hercules statues on the palace entrances and will be sure to grab some of those when I settle and get a home. The tour guide went over some interesting things about why Viennese coffee comes with a cup of water and Vienna’s very involved history during World War II. After getting the history rundown, the tour dropped us off on one of the most expensive shopping streets in Europe. The group of us snuck away to grab some food and I had an amazing Goulash while an Australia asked me every possible question about living in India and getting yoga certified.

Never miss a chance for some authentic schnitzel

Afterwards, I roamed the city a bit more as there were some sights we didn’t cover in the walking tour and usually most of my time is spent walking. After the long walk, I hid in a little cafe and checked eating an apple strudel in Vienna off my list while writing some code. In the morning, I needed to catch a bus but wanted to grab a schnitzel before I left Vienna, so my roommate and the yoga informed Australian joined me for brunch before I took off.

Everyone Is A Beer Drinker In Munich

Arriving in Munich, I was starving. I was supposed to couchsurf with another volleyball player, but I still wasn’t feeling very social so I paid for a hostel. I got a recommendation on where to eat, a brewery that was super famous in Munich and had been brewing beer for almost two hundred years. I ended up walking past it because it was a large, crowded place and I was just trying to eat alone. I found a little place where I could grab another schnitzel and spetzl and popped in. I asked for a table for one before realizing the tables were set family style and was sat in the middle of a group.

The bartender probably poured over a thousand of these in the short time we were there

The group already had liter steins of beer, and I don’t like beer, but after a short discussion, we all agreed I was in Munich and needed one. The group ended up being three guys from Southern California so we chatted while I ate. I intended to see the brewery after eating, and they were looking to continue drinking, so they joined me. The brewery was awesome. Casks and casks of beers flew out of a back room and the bartender hammered a tap into them. The bartender took no money and served nothing but beers. For the almost three hours we were there, he was consistently pouring beers. Munich turned out exactly as I imagined it.

Here’s some churches from the roof of another church

The next day, I roamed around Munich, checking out the glockenspiel and various churches. Roaming Europe is a bit less exciting than Asia as it mostly ends up being what churches you can see and what statues are where. I ended up sitting in a park with a giant pretzel and just people watching for a bit before I decided it was time to take off.

Sir, You Can’t Afford To Breath Here

A short bus ride later and I arrived in Zurich. Maria, the awesome photographer who took care of Ryan and I our first time in Koh Phangan, was gracious enough to let me take over her apartment for over a week. I got off the bus and made the fifteen minute walk to her apartment, stubbornly refusing to take the tram so I could see the surrounding area. Upon arrival, I took a shower and did some laundry before she asked if I wanted to watch a movie. My favorite question in the world. I hadn’t laid down and watched a movie on a television since that night in the Vietnamese hotel in the middle of nowhere over two months prior.

All over Zurich, you can find stores filled pretty much wall to wall with decadent chocolates

The following day, she had to go to work, so I explored the area and found that Zurich is at least twice as expensive as anywhere else I had been in Europe and I was still used to Asian prices. A Swiss Franc is almost equivalent to the US dollar and a fast food burger meal cost almost twenty Swiss Francs. I knew this week would be rough on the wallet. Luckily, Maria left me her gym pass so I did some yoga before heading to the gym for a workout. My first time lifting weights in over two months and I had to make sure not to get too excited and hurt myself so I could go again the rest of the week.

Hitting a nearby grocery store to let me afford eating, this was the first time I had cooked my own food since I left besides during cooking classes. My cooking skills have never been as intricate as I would like, but I have my usual stuff down to a tee. Maria showed me around Old Town and to some chocolate shops and I finally got a chance to relax with nothing planned to do. Most of my week was yoga, gym and movies, and anyone who knows me knows that that isn’t something I was upset about.

These ice cream prices are a straight up personal attack

A scoop of gelato was four Francs, so I didn’t eat any gelato while I was there out of principle, as it was two Euros for two scoops in the rest of Europe and I would be in Italy next. Otherwise, Zurich was a great pitstop. On my last full day in Zurich, Maria won some tickets to an orchestra and I remembered how much I enjoy watching people perform such intricate music in perfect harmony. This wasn’t my final full day in Switzerland though.

The view from the top of Harder Klum

I am happiest when I am above things

The next day was a Swiss holiday, so Maria didn’t have work and we took the train to Interlaken, a city between two lakes (thus the name) that was in the Alps. We hiked up to the top of Harder Klum and I got to take in the breathtaking views of the Alps behind the lakes. I am eternally baffled that people grow up in places so beautiful. After the hike, we came down and I had to get some fondue in its birthplace and got to try to rosti. A train ride stopping in Lucerne and then back in Zurich.

The bus from Zurich to Milan needs no entertainment

Most of me visiting people on this trip has involved me disappearing while they are at work, and this was no different. I left at 9am, so unfortunately another instance of taking off unnoticed.

You Think You’re Too Good For Your Home?

Everyone always assumes I have been to Italy, as that is what most of my heritage is. I have held travel to Italy on this high pedastal, always saying that if I go to Italy, I have to go for a while and see everything. I decided that excuse doesn’t make sense and I should at least hit one Italian city, but you know me by now, and sitting still isn’t my M.O. My bus went from Zurich to Milan and then I had a train to Pisa.

This nice police puppy came to celebrate my twentieth country

Arriving at the Italian border, I was excited to mark Italy as my twentieth country visited since I first left the U.S. less than three years ago. As we reached the border, our bus was stopped. The first time a train or a bus had ever been stopped at a border for me while traveling in Europe. Police came on and checked everyone’s passports. I immediately realized that my Spanish knowledge wasn’t helping much with Italian. I speak all of these languages and can’t understand the language of the place my bloodline is from. This was embarassing. The police brought on a dog and it found marijuanain someone’s bag. We waited while they were processed and then we got to Milan.

Please know that I had two or three of these majestic objects in hand every day

Upon getting to Milan, I took a tram to the train station and searched for food. I got a giant calzone and some gelato. Italy already topped the list of places on the trip. A few more hours on a train and I was in Pisa. Worried about missing my stop because Pisa wasn’t the last stop for that train, I ended up hopping off a stop in advance. My hostel was a twenty five minute walk away with all of my stuff, but the route took me past the Leaning Tower. I’m not sure how many direction lists include turning right at famous monuments, but these ones did.

This was the most touristy picture spot I have seen in over five months

I got to the hostel around ten and the only things open were pizzerias, so I grabbed a big pizza for only five euros and then got some sleep. The next day I roamed around and hit all the monuments in Pisa, which isn’t too many. Finding a riverside cafe, I grabbed a cannoli dipped in chocolate chips and pistachio, perfection.

The day didn’t go well, but look at this culinary art

A friend told me about an area just west of Pisa where they play volleyball on the beach so I booked a hostel without doing any other research. That bit is necessary because I didn’t realize that there was only one bus per hour that went that direction and it took forty five minutes. As a reference, the city further south than that that also had a beach required a fifteen minute train that came frequently. I hopped on the bus and it broke down halfway, leaving me over an hour walk from the hostel to wait thirty more minutes for the next bus. If you haven’t gotten the memo yet, I have bad travel luck.

Never would have guessed this many Italians do Capoeira

I relaxed in the hostel before heading to the beach. The beach was a forty minute walk from my hostel, and since I didn’t catch the bus in time, it was faster to walk than wait for the bus. The beach with the volleyball nets was called “Bagno Del Americani” which means “Bathroom of Americans”, which I am still confused about but was pretty consistent with the other beach names. Upon arriving, I hopped in the water and watched some volleyball. They were only playing fours and there were about seven groups of four waiting to use two courts and with my lack of Italian language knowledge, I ended up just spectating. There was also a Capoiera level test going on near the courts, so I got to watch that which was cool. Capoiera is high on the list of skills to learn. It’s essentially Brazilian breakdance fighting. After having my fill of spectating, I caught a bus back.

I hoped to just grab dinner at my hostel but there was some sort of family reunion going on so I snuck out to a nearby restaurant. For the first time on this trip, I ordered pasta. A carbonara really hit the spot for how hungry I was. Like an idiot, I am always determined to try local delicacies and a local signature of the area I was in, Livorno, is the Ponce. The Ponce is a variation of an Espresso Corretto, which is espresso and whiskey, but with rum replacing the whiskey. I don’t like rum or espresso, and the drink is served piping hot in a shot glass. I did my best to finish it quickly, as is custom, and ended up burning my tongue.

A Quick Blast of History

The following morning I woke up at 6am and caught the long 7am bus back over to Pisa. Getting to my 8:30am train early, I found the platform heading to Florence and waited. I hopped on and wrote some code for an hour before checking my GPS to see how close I was. I was very far. I had gotten on the train in the opposite direction. The sign had said where the train was departing from , not where it was headed. I was now two hours from Florence and was immediately sick of traveling. I just wanted to lay on the ground until it was time to fly to Madrid. A thirty minute wait and then a two hour train ride and I was finally in Florence.

There’s no good place to get a picture of how huge this cathedral is

Exiting the train station, I found a place to drop my bag not far from Santa Maria Cathedral. The cathedral is huge and awe inspiring, and was entirely wrapped in a line to get inside. This would be a common sight in Florence. Next, I hit Galleria Accademia, where the original David statue lives. Again, the building was wrapped in a line and even if you waited, entry cost thirty Euros. I have been traveling long enough that I am good on paying a lot or waiting a lot to see inanimate objects. I headed back to the cathedral to grab some gelato and people watch. I decided it was a good idea to eat before gelato so I grabbed a porchetta panini from a little shop. A group of Chinese tourists were having trouble ordering so I did my best to bridge the gap between the Chinese group and the Italian staff with my very limited Italian knowledge. Luckily, they were asking about sugar and I know that word from ordering Coke Zero. Next stop, Edoardo’s for gelato. It was suggested by several people, so I actually waited in line for this.

This is probably one tenth of one of the infinite lines

Next up, I went to see the statue of Dante Alighieri, author of Dante’s Inferno and the Basilica of Santa Croce, burial place of Galileo and Machiavelli. A walk along the river and I hit some museums with even more huge lines. I began to wonder how much time on average a Florence tourist spends just standing in lines. Next stop was Ponte Vecchio, a bridge with shops built into its walls that sells mostly gold and jewelry. Off to my favorite spot, Piazza del Signoria.

It’s not the original, but can you tell?

One of the coolest stories in any mythology

Piazza del Signoria is an open plaza filled with statues surrounding a church. Here you can find replicas of famous statues, including a replica of Michelangelo’s David, that statue people were paying thirty Euros and waiting hours to go see a few blocks away. Amongst many others, this plaza houses a statue of Perseus holding Medusa’s severed head with an insane amount of detail and more of the Hercules statues like in Vienna.

After this, I needed some food so I hit up another suggestion, All’antico Vinaio. I was told this was a really good sandwich shop, what I wasn’t told is that there were five of them all next to each other and all of them had an insane line. So far, I had only waited in line for gelato and food, not mad.

Good luck piggy

After eating, I roamed the city a bit more, in search of a bathroom, which is much harder than it should be. I found the Fontana del Porcellino, or the Piglet Fountain, where you rub its snout and put a coin in its mouth and if it falls into the grate below, it means good luck. Unfortunately, I didn’t get the good luck and I accept my fate and didn’t grab my coin again for another try, like many of the other tourists. Back to my bag and I hit the train station to go to La Spezia.

I Expected Italian To Come Out When You Opened Your Mouth

The train arrives and I make the walk through La Spezia to my hostel. The hostel was a converted modern apartment, and it provided a very homey feel making it very easy to make friends. I grabbed a soda and found some information about hiking the Cinque Terre, five seaside towns on the western coast of Italy separated by trails.

For real, I had a lot of gelato

Up early and ready to go, I grabbed breakfast and made a battle plan for hiking the Cinque Terre. Some of the friends I had made were also doing the hike, so I made plans to meet up with them in the cities. Over the course of this trip, I have learned that all the Spartan training made the speed I like to hike at significantly faster than a comfortable speed for normal humans and normal human hiking speed now makes my brain want to explode from boredom. I started in the middle city, Corniglia, and hiked off to Vernazza. A one and a half hour hike knocked out in forty minutes and I grabbed myself a panini and some gelato while I waited for my friends.

There was an abandoned building at the viewpoint with my name on it

After we spent some time relaxing in Vernazza, we went to start the hike to Monterosso. The person checking tickets at the beginning of the hike saw my Tevas and said I needed closed toe shoes, even though I had just done a full hike and the shoes offered more support than most of the shoes other people were wearing. No go. I contemplated taking the train to Monterosso and hiking the other way, but there was a chance I would be stopped there too. I grabbed the train back to La Spezia, ran to the hostel to switch shoes and came back, then a train back to Monterosso. I got there around the time my friends did, so we checked out the beach town and then began another hike. This one reaching a viewpoint that provides the other view of all five cities.

This wine was made in those mountains

Manarola is easily one of the most picturesque cities I have ever been in

After the hike, we took a quick swim. The water in this area is so clear you can perfectly see your feet while swimming. It mostly looks like a giant pool of blue Powerade that extends to the horizon. A pitstop at a restaurant to eat some lasagna and try some white wine made in the surrounding mountains before eating some gelato and heading to the city of Manarola to watch the sunset with a cannoli in hand before heading home.

Back to the hostel, I made a pit stop for more food. I found a burger place near the hostel and stood there for a minute looking at the menu. When I opened my mouth to order, the cashier looked immediately surprised. “I expected Italian to come out when you opened your mouth.”, he blurted. Maybe next time. My burger and I returned to the hostel where the common room and the kitchen were packed with people. I found a corner seat and began eating. The preface this part, I had told my new friends that in over five months of traveling, the only nationality that ever had anything to say about me being American was Canadians. A girl asked where everyone was from. She was unphased when she was told the Netherlands and New Zealand, but when I replied, “I am American.” between bites, she began a tirade. Usually, I reply to this question with “The States” or “USA”, because in the past, other countries from North and South America have been a bit displeased with this answer, but “The States” and “USA” bring about their own confusion with non native English speakers. Her immediate response was “Where are you from? You’re not American. Everyone in North and South America are Americans. So where are you from?” In the past, I probably would have gone toe to toe with her, using my intelligence and general lack of caring what people think to brute force her into an apology, but these things are trivial. I have been traveling for months, this is not the first time someone has had a holier than thou response to me being American/from the US. I calmly replied, “Are you Canadian?” To which her look changed to confusion. “Yes, how did you know?” I told her that Canadians always have something to say about America. She continued and I explained to her that in almost every other language, citizens of the US are referred to with some sort of “American” prefix. Americano, Amerikanisch, Amerikanskiy, etc. I didn’t make these languages and it seems like an odd thing to get up in arms about. My burger was gone and I snuck into the kitchen to find other people to chat with.

At 11pm, the common areas closed and we went to a nearby bar to continue chatting. Looking at alcoholic beverages, I saw “The Godfather”, my go to drink in college when I was quitting drinking but wanted to just have one so everyone would leave me alone. Marlon Brando’s Scotch/Amaretto mix seemed like the perfect drink for Italy. We finished up and headed back to sleep.

One Last Stop

These stairs look prettier than they felt after over a thousand of them

The next morning, I hit up Riomaggore, the fifth city, to check them all off the list. I planned to hike to Porto Verene but it would have been six hours, which would have put me all the way up to my train time. I hiked with my friends from the first night for the first hour of their hike and stopped at a viewpoint that gave me a view of some of the other cities, as well as the viewpoint we hiked to the day before. After I left them, I hiked back down to grab some gnocchi. After finishing up, I grabbed the train back to La Spezia and did a little sight seeing there, since I never saw the city I was actually staying in. From there, I grabbed some gelato and got on my train, with a quick stop in Parma before ending up in Milan.

People had given me many warnings about how boring Milan was, but I rip through most cities in a day, so I wasn’t really worried. I paid a bit extra for a more social hostel to hopefully make a friend to see the city with, but when I got there, it was mostly filled with twenty year old Americans. No thanks. I got a recommendation for what area to eat in, took off and came back to watch a movie.

Doesn’t look to Wes Anderson-esque

The next morning, I had hoped to play some volleyball, as it had been over two weeks since I had played. Most of the Italian cities had left me empty handed while looking for beach volleyball, but my lack of speaking Italian and their usual lack of speaking English made it not so likely I would stumble up anything. No luck here either. I left the hostel at 9:30am and headed for Bar Luce. Bar Luce is entirely designed by Wes Anderson and is housed in the Fondazione Prada. After chatting with some Americans who had awkwardly asked me for directions in broken Italian, I took off for Bocconi University.

Prior to deciding to quit my job, discard all of my things and roam the Earth, I had considered quitting my job and running away to a top business Master’s school. SDA Bocconi had been my main choice, since it was in the top ten and was located in Italy. I still have hopes of attending that school, and my newfound desire for Italian fluency only pushes that. I stopped by the campus and it felt a bit like a super tiny Ohio State, so future me could definitely do that. A bit of a walk to the famous Duomo and I stopped to grab a bunch of pictures.

The Duomo looks like a super villain lair

Name that Pokemon

The Duomo is overwhelming. It is huge and full of ornate details. For some reason, there is a crazy long necked dinosaur creature right near the main door and I sat for a bit wondering what other crazy things are on this building. A short walk to the shopping area led me to a tile mosaic bull where you’re supposed to spin on your heel on the bull’s balls for good luck and then to a statue of Leonardo Da Vinci. A lucky text from a friend sent me to the San Bernardino alle Ossa, a church with a room filled with human bones and skulls. The history of Christianity is insane and when they ran out of cemetery room, they decorated this room with bones and skulls. A short walk over to the “L.O.V.E.” statue to end my tourism. This statue was of a very details hand, with every finger cut off besides a raised middle finger, apparently meant for the bankers that fill Milan. Back to the Duomo to enjoy some ravioli and try the apertivo “Crodino” and I decided to end my time in Milan.

Bone art

After walking ten miles for the day, I went back to the hostel to charge my phone and download some movies for the trip. I also found out the trip from hostel to airport would be an hour and a half, so I wanted to leave early to account for any issues. I grabbed some gelato and carried my stuff to the tram, which I took to a bus, that had fifty minutes to drive to the airport. Then I went through the slowest airport security and finally got on my flight to Madrid.

Technically, Madrid should kind of be in this post based on the date but I will save it for next time. Two days in Madrid, then a weekend in New York for the AVP NYC Open and then I am back in Cleveland after over one hundred and fifty days. Ciao!

Journey To The West : May 12th – May 19th

Alas, the story has me returning to Western culture. I woke up and headed to the Delhi airport. I hailed a tuk tuk, only to find out that tuk tuks can’t actually go all the way to the airport, forcing me to take a shuttle bus the remainder of the way. At this point, I have been in a lot of airports around the world and I currently consider the Delhi airport the least efficient one I have ever been to. To enter the airport, you wait in a line where they check your boarding pass and passport/id. I am not sure how you get in if you need to check in there, because you would have to get through the doors for that. Throughout the whole process, they checked my boarding pass nine times. They were checking my boarding pass in areas that required checking my boarding pass to enter. Oh well, a bit of annoyance later and I was on my flight. My seven hour flight turned into over eight due to issues between India and Pakistan and us having to go around, but otherwise an easy flight.

Not a bad way to burn five hours

A five hour layover in Kiev, Ukraine saw me have my first taste of beef in over a month, an underwhelming burger. I’m not particularly fond of beer, but it’s such a staple of Eastern European culture, it seemed wrong not to have one. Also, there’s not much to do in the Kiev airport. A short flight later on the tiniest plane I have ever been on and I was in Riga, Latvia.

I am counting this as a private jet

Latvia Is Not Latveria

I have been dragging bad weather with me through Europe

I landed in Riga around nine thirty at night. Oddly enough, th sun still had not set. I was told it would be cold, but it still felt like tank top and shorts weather to me. Sandra, one of the people from the Beachbox Camp in Thailand, was nice enough to come get me from the airport and let me crash in her apartment. The next morning, the weather was not so nice. It was gloomy and raining pretty consistently. As I have been in hot weather since Christmas, I have no jeans or anything else to wear for cold weather, so I did some Riga sight seeing while checking out some stores. Found a pair of jeans after a bit and met Sandra at Lido’s, a buffet style Latvian restaurant. Latvian food is what you would expect from an Eastern European country, heavy food, potatoes, good food for the cold weather. This style of food is pretty much non existent in Asia, so I was more than looking forward to it.

The entrance to Beach Box indoor courts

After a month of sitting around India, I was not quite in volleyball shape. Sandra took me to see the indoor sand facility run by our other friend from Beachbox Camps, Renars. After a few hours of playing, I was feeling a bit more like myself. As tiring as doing several hours of yoga in one hundred degree weather was, it never gave me the level of exhaustion that a few hours of volleyball does. A little food after and I slept like a baby. The following day, we got lunch in Riga’s central market before I went and finished the post about Dharamshala. Then I got the chance to do some more volleyball training.

Indoor sand courts with heated sand and fake island decor for the winter months

I was easily the weakest player and the shortest person in the training group. Usually, I make up for any shortfalls with endurance and defensive skills, but a month of yoga killed my endurance and lack of reps had diminished my defense skills. We spent the training doing a good amount of drills, some focused on advanced hitting techniques. Hitting is my least used skill, since it’s a new one and I prefer to shoot. We did a drill that required me to hit cross body, which loses height from a normal swing, really showing off my lack of height and my legs’ current state of weakness. Following the training, we played some pickup and I got some confidence back being able to shoot the ball and play defense like I never took a break. After playing, I remembered how bad my endurance was after a month of sitting in the yogashala and kind of wanted to die. Some food and another good night’s sleep before my last full day in Riga.

More courts in Jurmala

Luckily, Sandra convinced me to buy a hoodie, because she took me to the beach and the wind off sea was freezing cold. I don’t know too many people with sponsorships, so the idea of it is still a bit foreign to me, but it was weird to find out that Samoilovs is sponsored by the municipality of Jurmala, a very popular beach area of Latvia. We made a walk down the beach to see where the FIVB held an event and where Samoilovs trains when the weather is nice. After that, we walked through the beautiful park near the Jurmala beach. Adding Riga to my travel recommendations list. After the super long beach walk, we took the train back to Riga and grabbed some Indian food (because I didn’t have enough of it apparently) and I attempted to give my tired legs a break. Sandra had other ideas.

Something about biking off into the sunset

She had borrowed a bike from a friend and hade her own so we rode around Riga to see some of the areas I didn’t get a chance to see on foot. We made a pitstop to see one of her friends that was attending a Nike group fitness event in the park. Over fifty people were there going through an interval style workout run by a few trainers. The personal trainer part of my brain exploded as they had people of all skill levels attempted exercises that you should likely refrain from using with the beginner crowd. Oh well, better than nothing. We biked a bit more before stopping at a bridge to watch the sunset. Day total ended up being over fifteen kilometers walking and over ten kilometers biking on a city bike. My poor legs never get any rest.

Bye bye, Riga

Back to Berlin

After an awesome breakfast at Big Bad Bagels, I carried my fifteen kilos worth of stuff to say goodbye to Sandra and catch a bus to the airport. A painless flight to Berlin and then to make it to another friend’s place. Berlin is the first place I have traveled back to, but after visiting the first time, I decided I could live there. It is pretty much the Austin, Texas of Europe. Tons to do, plenty of people doing all sorts of crazy stuff and not as expensive as you would expect. I was amazed at how much of the city I remembered exactly, but I guess that’s the benefit of a photographic memory. Even the airport had changed dramatically since I was there over two years ago. Interestingly enough, Germany was my second country I traveled to, two months after my first time leaving the US. It was also my first solo travel, an attempt to tackle my anxiety. I was a nervous wreck when I landed the first time, having already made travel mistakes and arriving with dead electronics. Fast forward two and a half years later and I was arriving solo again, this time much more comfortable traveling and being alone. I took the train to a coffee shop near where Julia, another volleyball player I met in Thailand(Thanks, Beachbox!) lived.

Berlin Wall art

I got to stay in an extra room in Julia’s flat, which was likely one of the nicest places I have stayed since I left America, much better than my hostel bed from my first trip to Berlin. After getting settled, she took me to a cool artsy area called Holzmarkt to check out a coffee shop. I have been attracting horrible weather to every city, so we got to do some walking in the rain after this. Our walk brought us to a length of the Berlin Wall that is regularly painted with different art. As we walked, I fully remembered where I was and was able to describe where other things were in relation, which was a really weird feeling for a place I was at over two years prior and only for three days. We grabbed some currywurst so I could check that off of my food list and headed home for some much needed sleep.

That’s one way to prove where your vegetables are sourced from

The following day, we did some more roaming of Berlin and grabbed some lunch at a place that grew their salads inside of the restaurant using hydroponics. Following that, we grabbed some ice cream, because ice cream in Berlin is all delicious and super cheap. While finishing my cone, we passed another highly recommended ice cream place…so we had second cones. My addiction knows no bounds. Julia showed me a really cool park near where the lives where every weekend people sign up to do karaoke and hundreds of people watch before heading home to do some work. While she worked, I hid in a coffee shop and worked on some code.

Following the little coding session, we caught the train to go check out some 3D blacklight minigolf. Walking around with alcohol is a legal and common occurence in Germany, so we grabbed some drinks for the long ride and made our way to the golf place. For an extra euro, we got 3D glasses and played two rounds of mini golf. It’s been a long time since I’ve done minigolf, but most of these holes were pretty intense. The blacklight art was all well done, and the 3D glasses made putting a mental struggle, so we played one game without them on. On the ride back, I grabbed a bratwurst to knock another German food off of the list and then we headed home.

The following morning, we were signed up for a volleyball tournament. The biggest tournament in the Cleveland area happens twice a summer and has thirty or forty courts set up. Several places in Berlin have over forty courts set up permanently and are in daily use. Absolutely madness. I got a chance to play at one of those places for this tournament and it was great to play outdoors again.

When playing mixed tournaments, most places have an unwritten courtesy rule that men serve the ball to the other men and other places have other variations of the courtesy rule. I usually tend to avoid playing mixed due to varying adherence to this courtesy rule. Berlin plays that the men should serve each other and they actually lower the net to between men and women’s height, so it is even easier for the guys. Surprisingly, Julia has been playing for less time than me, so it was cool to get to play with her. The weirdest thing about the tournament was that teams were allowed to sign up with two men, playing on the lower net. Of course, most of the men didn’t adhere to serving the guy, even when they had two guys on their team. Not my favorite occurence, especially with both of us getting used to playing together and getting used to playing outside. After the first few matches, we got our act together and pulled out some wins, finishing four and eight. Twelve games is a solid amount of play for a tournament, especially for one that only cost ten euros per player, and playing with Julia was a lot of fun, so it was a good day. After playing, the hunger was real, so we went and ate some delicious burgers (because I have missed burgers so much) and hit another ice cream place on the way home.

Commemorative 2018 FIFA World Cup Moscow coin for speaking Russian

Following some relaxation, Berlin had more in store for me. On the way to our first destination we had a conversation with a drunk Russian group who were in Berlin to watch Russia play Germany in indoor volleyball. The conversation was part English, part German and part Russian and ended in one of the guys giving both of us commemorative 2018 FIFA World Cup coins from Moscow. Life is pretty cool.

Birgit & Bier decorations were awesome

Julia got us on the list for a “Summer Love” party at a place called Birgit & Bier, which had a cool open space area that reminded me almost of a carnival, which was insanely decorated with hearts. After hitting up a little stand with kettle corn and heart shaped candies, we hit up the different bar areas. There was 90’s pop, Hip hop & RnB, Techno and another one that wasn’t open yet while we were there. After roaming around that bar, we made our way over to the Soho House. Apparently, Soho Houses are members clubs around the world for creatives to work out, hang out, relax and attend events and most of the bigger cities have them. By bigger cities, I mean London, New York, Berlin, etc. Due to their membership including celebrities, they have a no photos policy. We went to a “Gods of Hip Hop” event that was being djed by DJ Lord from Public Enemy and had a number of people in attendance from Public Enemy and Wu Tang Clan. The mixes were all awesome and the atmosphere was cool as well, even though it was weird to watch well dressed white people dance to remixes of ODB and DMX. After a few hours there, the exhaustion from several hours of volleyball in the sun set in and I made my way home.

I found myself a flea market

And a pride parade found me

Berlin is filled with cool stuff to see

HolzMarkt little dining area is so calm in the city

My last day in Berlin was spent roaming around, as Julia had to work. I did what I always do and popped my headphones in and began randomly walking around. I hit a nearby fleamarket and walked around before grabbing some ice cream and heading over to another part of the Berlin Wall and some other monuments I wanted to see again. As I got to the monument areas, the streets were filled with a Pride Parade. As I made my way around the city, I kept hitting filled streets, so I am not sure if it happened to be moving in accordance with me or there were multiple areas doing it. I found another one of the volleyball places and sat down to watch some people play for a bit. Afterwards, I made my way back to Holzmarkt to take some pictures of the area as I didn’t have my phone with me the first time and to say goodbye to Julia, as she would be working still when I left. I hopped over to a burger place to use the wifi to watch my new buddy, Chaim Schalk, kill it with one of my other favorite players to make it to the finals of the AVP Austin Open. Then I made it back to Julia’s apartment to get all of my stuff together.

Goodnight, Berlin

A few delayed train rides later and I was at the bus station waiting for my bus to Vienna and watching Chaim play my other favorite AVP team in the finals. Next up, I roam around Vienna looking at statues and eating strudels and get used to speaking to native English speakers again.